WORLD EVENTS, CULTURE & CIVILIZATION

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Thursday, 17 May 2018

a.The fallacy of Early Cold War
Transformation Policy Assumptions in the early 21st Century

In May 2018, the Trump
administration’s violation of the Iran nuclear deal (Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA, July 2014)
has reawakened the debate about possible end-game scenarios and the degree to
which Washington is prepared to unilateral policies in a highly integrated
capitalist world and multi-polar global power structure. The gamble of US unilateralism
became especially evident on 16 May 2018 when North Korea rejected US demand
for de-nuclearization in exchange for the promise of economic aid, ahead of a
planned summit meeting in June 2018.

A part of what many in
the West label “Axis of Evil” ever since George W. Bush used the term in a State
of the Union speech in January 2002, Iran and North Korea became demonized targets
not just for sanctions, but possible military action and regime change through
interventionist means that did not exclude covert operations. As an integral
part of imperial expansion, interventionism is a familiar pattern in US foreign
policy ever since the Spanish-American War. Bipartisan ultimately serving not
just an ideology rooted in Manifest Destiny, but economic interests,
interventionism is deeply rooted in the hegemonic culture of American society.

Democrats and Republicans
alike, the financial elites, the media, and billionaire-funded think tanks and
academics are convinced that Pax Americana operates today with the same level
of global influence as it did in the heyday of the early Cold War when Truman
used the ideological anti-Communist crusade to impose US hegemony abroad and
engender institutional conformity at home. Can the US in early 21st
century impose Cold War-style “transformation policy” as it did in the early
1950s when the CIA overthrew the duly-elected governments of Iran (Mohammad
Mosaddegh) and Guatemala (Jacobo Arbenz)? Possibly so, but only in a weak Latin
American or African nation, although this too may be problematic. Cold War
foreign policy assumptions for the sake of maintaining rapidly eroding global
economic status are obsolete today because the world is vastly different than
it was at the end of the Korean War. Nevertheless, the “transformation policy”
mode as a means of achieving imperial goals remains unchanged in the
institutional culture and broader society throughout the US.

Based on ambitious early
Cold War assumptions, ill-fated US foreign policy not just toward Iran and
North Korea, but globally, can be defaulted to the megalomaniac President
Donald Trump surrounded by opportunistic ideologues pursuing chaos for
political considerations at home and abroad. This means everything from
distracting the Special Counsel and other investigations of abuse of power, to
creating chaos among allies and enemies alike as a means of seeking advantage
in trade. Trying to prove that Pax Americana is as vibrant today as it was
under Eisenhower or even under Reagan, who forced the Soviet bloc’s
disintegration through various means, including an accelerated arms race to
bankruptcy, the US is desperately resorting to aspects of isolationism that
only backfire politically and economically.

While the US and its
allies want the world to believe that the geopolitical struggle is between
Communist North Korea and theocratic Iran led by evil leaders against the
world, one must consider whether the world or even the neighbors of Iran and North
Korea share the view of the US, Israel and some of their allies in Europe and
Asia. Many would find it difficult to believe that South Koreans actually
sympathize more with their northern neighbor than with the US. In fact, a
recent public opinion poll shows that among Asians North Koreans have far greater
confidence in China than in the US that has targeted South Korean for a trade
war. Similarly, Iran is far more popular than the US in Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen,
Syria and throughout the Middle East even among those skeptical of Teheran’s
goal to determine the regional balance of power. Even among US allies in
Europe, most notably Germany, US foreign policy lacks support because the
Europeans, also pursuing global economic expansionism often resorting to military
interventionism, are hardly unaware that it is the US not Iran and North Korea
that has been destabilizing the world and has the power to seriously compromise
the sovereignty of other countries and undercut their various interests.

b.Reckless Imperialist or the Reckless
Imperial Structure?

It is at best naïve and
misguided to blame the reckless president who has been willing to sell US
foreign policy if he can benefit his family interests and those associated with
him. At the core of policy rests an imperial structure firmly in place historically
that operates with the same goals, no matter who is president. While many Cold
War Democrats adamantly oppose the unilateral US violation of the multilateral
Iran nuclear deal in May 2018, this does not mean that they are any less hawkish
than their Republican counterparts. On the contrary, their obsession with
Russia as a distraction for everything that has gone wrong with the American
political economy indicates deliberate unwillingness to address very serious
issues of gross inequality in society. At the same time, enthusiasm on the part
of Democrats and their supporters of Trump bombing Syria on the pretext that President
Assad has been using chemical weapons, without providing any proof or
permitting the UN to investigate, illustrates that militarism is hardly a
Republican monopoly.

From Truman to Obama, history
has demonstrated bipartisan militarism and support of Pax Americana using
foreign enemies as a pretext for imperial expansion. Obama and the Democrats
that were on the same side as jihadists in Libya, Yemen, and Syria. Obama and
the Democrats used drone warfare killing innocent civilians in the Middle East
and Africa. Despite Obama’s promises to end military occupation of Afghanistan,
the troops remain on the ground with no end in sight for withdrawal in a
country where Pakistan and China enjoy far more influence.

Behind the bipartisan
militarist foreign policy with proven ill-fated results since the Vietnam War we
have what Bernie Sanders calls the “class of billionaires”, although it is in
fact a larger institutional structure that includes everything from Wall
Street, defense industries, law firms and consultants profiting from militarism
whether in the form of the old or new arms race. In the absence of support for
such a policy by big capital that benefits from militarist policies directly or
indirectly, there would be no long-standing foreign policy consensus goals and no
quest for imperial global hegemony that transcends political parties.

Hillary Clinton would not
have violated the Iran nuclear deal. A Democrat administration would have a
multilateral approach in its quest to normalize relations with North Korea and
it would have taken into account continuity of globalization under
neoliberalism without trying to address the US balance of payments deficit
through trade wars threats and bilateral agreements. Just as obedient to Wall
Street and the defense establishment, a Democrat administration would have
opened other fronts for conflict; most likely they would have intensified
conflict with Russia over Ukraine and assisted jihadists in Syria and Yemen much
more than Trump has so far. US foreign policy goals would not have changed because
Wall Street and a very broad Cold War institutional establishment determines
them. As an integral part of foreign policy, military solutions and covert counterinsurgency
operations will remain; only the theaters of conflict and modalities would be
different and agency priorities with the State Department played a more visible
role than the Pentagon.

Because imperialism as a US goal is hardly the domain of Trump and
Republicans who are openly authoritarian and embrace the beneath-the-surface
totalitarian nature of the neoliberal institutional structure, ill-fated US
foreign policy in an increasingly multi-polar world will continue no matter the
occupant of the White House. Considering that the US economy is so heavily parasitic,
relying on “financialization” (the dominant role of market speculation at the
expense of the economy), the political, financial and media/intellectual elites
operate under the same set of assumptions about what accounts for ‘the national
interest’. Therefore, they fall into the same trap of illusions regarding US
foreign policy as an instrument of expanding the declining American empire,
namely, the use of the world’s largest military arsenal as leverage to keep Pax
Americana hegemonic in the 21st century, while pursuing neoliberal
policies that keep widening the rich-poor gap at home.

c.Contradictions of the ill-Fated US Foreign
Policy

Numerous contradictions backfire with domestic and foreign policy
consequences and account for the ill-fated US foreign policy. For example, Iran
is not economically integrated with the US, relying much more on China, the
United Arab Emirates, Iraq, with EU playing a secondary role – mostly Germany
and France. Only when the sanctions were lifted did the larger European
countries accelerate trade with Iran in the domain of everything from energy to
aircraft and automobiles. Unless the US places effective sanctions – not circumvented
via third parties - on the EU doing business with Iran, a very real prospect
with some exemptions, its foreign policy goals of trying to determine the
balance of power in the Middle East by weakening Iran and strengthening Israel
and Saudi Arabia are a dead end policy. Threatening to crush Iran is empty rhetoric that we have heard many times before from Reagan to the present. Yet, Iran has become stronger no matter how hurtful the sanctions, and they have been hurtful for economic development.

One possible method by which Washington can force its EU/NATO partners to
choose between national economic interests and loyalty to Pax Americana is to
engage Iran directly or indirectly through Israel/Saudi Arabia into a regional war,
as both Tel Aviv and Riyadh would love. EU and Middle East leaders are well
aware of such an inevitability, largely because the unlikely allies Saudi
Arabia and Israel are promoting regional war against Iran. Saudi Arabia in fact
paid $110 billion in US defense contracts in exchange for securing an openly
hostile US policy toward Iran with the possibility of war down the road or at
least continuing the disastrous war in Yemen. The contradiction here is that
the US is indirectly on the same side as the jihadist terrorists it publicly
claims it is fighting globally, thus exposing the vacuous rhetoric about the
war on terror.

Unlike France and UK that joined the US in bombing Syrian targets in April
2018, all of Europe could adopt the German position of non-participation, if
the US decides to hit Iran directly or indirectly. More than likely, the
Europeans would call for a UN Security Council meeting to resolve the conflict
diplomatically, just as they did in May 2018 amid the Israeli killings of
Palestinians protesting the US embassy opening in Jerusalem. The military
solution scenario targeting Iran would be a major illustration of an ill-fated
US foreign policy not just regionally, but globally as it would force
nuclear-club members China and Russia on Iran’s side. This situation would be
further complicated if there is nothing that arises from US-North Korean negotiations
in June 2018, or if such negotiations are perfunctory and simply keep the
status quo with some perfunctory agreement about avoiding provocative military
exercises on both sides in exchange for improved economic relations. The idea
that North Korea would strip itself of the nuclear deterrent is simply another
of many illusions on the part of naïve politicians, analysts and policymakers.

In both Iran and North Korea, US foreign policy will result into a two-front
ill-fated solutions that would further erode America’s global status. China and
Russia would inadvertently be seen as the powers seeking stability; Europe
would be further alienated seeking closer ties to Russia and China; and
die-hard apologists of Pax Americana would still not have learned the lesson that
the world power structure of 2018 is not the same as it was in 1950. As the
undisputed economic global hegemonic power that more and more countries are
following, China is leaving behind the US which is relying more heavily on its
military might as the only leverage to assert imperial power. While US military
power cannot be underestimated as leverage in the pursuit of global hegemony,
history has taught us that no power in history has ever been able to maintain
hegemony for very long on the basis of bankrupting its civilian economy just to
maintain a strong defense. This is especially true of the US today with an economy
in decline relative to other powers and domestic income distribution resembling
that of non-Western developing nations.

The political elites – both Republicans and Democrats – and the business
elites that control the media, think tanks and enjoy enormous influence over
academic institutions through their funding are pursuing an ill-fated foreign
policy in part to retain global market share but also to keep the social order
at home and abroad frozen under the neoliberal model of political economy,
whether that model is pluralistic (under the Democrat Party) or rightwing
populist (Trump’s Republican Party). Although mired in contradictions in terms
of achieving its own state goals, the militarist-expansionist US foreign policy
solution has many dimensions and implications domestically and globally. This
should not come as a surprise to anyone if they simply examine that only erosion
of power has been achieved by US intervention since the Vietnam War but
especially in the last two decades in Afghanistan, Iraq, across North Africa
and the Middle East.

Even by Trump’s own populist isolationist rhetoric, the result of militarism
as a means of achieving regime change and integration of the country into the
US orbit of influence has cost the US an estimated $7 trillion which has been added
to the public debt. However, the combination of ideological, political, and
economic impetus for “Empire As A Way of Life”,
to borrow William Appleman Williams famous book title, has become “perpetual militarism
and regime change as a way of life” under any administration. This is because
Manifest Destiny indoctrination as a means of keeping capitalism viable remains
deeply ingrained in the perceived short-term interests of the political and
social elites that they see no alternative.

The question rarely arises about the heavy reliance on
the defense sector’s inordinate influence in ill-fated foreign policy and the
contradictions imbedded in such a policy. Despite losing market share over the
past two decades because of increased competition from Asia, the United States
still enjoyed the largest share of the global arms trade between 2012 and 2016
at 33 percent. From 2002 until the end of the Obama administration, America’s top
ten arms buyers are Middle East countries led by Saudi Arabia $25.8 billion,
followed by a commitment for $110 billion agreement signed with Trump in 2017;
Egypt $17.1 billion; Israel $15.2 billion; Iraq $8.9 billion and United Arab
Emirates $6.3 billion. Of the $1.7 spent
on defense, the US accounts for $700 billion. Whereas the US spent 3.5% of its
GDP on defense, China spends 2%, a reflection of the respective countries’
focus on defense vs. civilian economies.

Encouraged by the fall of
the Soviet bloc, apologists of Pax Americana argue that the US “won the Cold
War” and by extension the assumption is it has no rival, as though capitalism has
national confines and determined by a nation’s military might. If this is
indeed the case, why is there a new Cold War with Russia; in some respects just
as contentious as the old Cold War? What exactly did the US “win” in the Cold
War, other than weakening its civilian economy because of its massive transfer
of funding from the civilian economy to the parasitic defense sector which
remains as draining to the economy today as when President Eisenhower warned
about the military industrial complex in his farewell address in January 1961.

d.
What are the Goals of the Ill-Fated US Foreign Policy?

1.Sanctions
as Global Economic Leverage: If the goal of the US is
to use sanctions as another form of economic nationalism and to afford
advantage to US-based companies, a policy that has been used especially toward
Russia, then the goal will be achieved short-term but longer term sanctions are
hardly a viable substitute for competitiveness in the international arena. While
the terms of trade will be ephemerally tilted in favor of the US because of
sanctions, the risk is alienating allies that will turn to China and the rest
of the world. Appealing to the US to stop threatening trade war, the EU has been
considering not to rely on the dollar as a means of exchange when dealing with
Iran, thus further undercutting the value of the dollar as a reserve currency. Moreover,
repercussions are inevitable if Iran-related sanctions targeting EU companies
go into effect.

2.Securing
Satellites: If the goal of the US is to integrate Iran
and North Korea economically and politically under its orbit, after pursuing
containment in both cases, then it is deluding itself because China and Russia,
among other countries, will do their utmost to undermine such a goal. In an
increasingly multi-polar global power structure where the world economy is so
thoroughly integrated, does the 19th century sphere of influence
model make much sense, or is it simply a costly enterprise with not much to
show for it?

3.Fomenting
a new Arms Race for the New Cold War: If the goal is to
further destabilize these countries and foment an arms race that will benefit
US defense contractors, that will be achieved. However, the gains are only
short-term at a very high cost politically and economically to those sectors in
the US economy not linked to defense. How much pain are the American financial
and political elites are willing to impose on their shrining middle class to
maintain the title of preeminent military superpower?

4.Containing/Weakening
Russia and China: The balance of power has always been
important since the Peloponnesian Wars and it remains so even as the Great
Powers recognize the need for self-imposed limitations. If the goal of the US
is to determine the balance of power in the Middle East and East Asia,
threatening military confrontation is a dead-end proposition. Even South Korean
political leaders recognize as much for their region, although Saudi Arabia and
Israel may not be imbued with such realism when it comes to their roles in the
Middle East. The idea that North Korea will ever become a US satellite like
South Korea, or that Iran will go back to the days of the Shah installed by the
CIA in 1953 is an illusion best left to opportunists and ideologues in and
outside of the US and other Western governments, and to warmongers in Israel
and Saudi Arabia interested in dragging the US into a regional conflict and by
extension forcing other countries to take sides.

5.Militarism
as Policy Tool in Imperial Conformity: If the goal of
the US is flexing its military muscle to perpetually destabilize countries
where and when it can have its way, then short-term the results will be positive,
especially for corporations benefiting from government contracts. Although it
is true that people rally around the flag and war unifies them while it is
taking place, if the war does not end favorably and the costs are very damaging
to the parties involved, then there is a high price to be paid for militarism
as a tool of imperial conformity.

6.Militarism
as Policy Tool in Economic and Political Solidarity:
If the goal is to keep traditional allies loyal to US militarily because
economically they are becoming increasingly integrated into the Asian orbit
under the aegis of China, Europeans recognize that the US is using its military
muscle to gain global economic advantages for US-based corporations; a
recognition that evokes resentment owing to manipulation of foreign policy not
in the name of security but to strengthen specific companies. On 16 May 2018, Donald
Tusk, President of the European Council, twitted the following in a sharp response
to threatened sanctions over Iran: “Looking
at latest decisions of @realDonaldTrump someone could even think: with
friends like that who needs enemies. But frankly, EU should be grateful. Thanks
to him we got rid of all illusions. We realise that if you need a helping hand,
you will find one at the end of your arm.”

The mutual geopolitical and economic
interests of the EU and US means continued cooperation. However, cooperation
has its limits, as Tusk and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have pointed out. Although
capitalism has no borders, politicians’ job is to protect national capitalist interests
and forge popular consensus around national sovereignty issues. There is no
denying that the eroding core status of the US and its tactics to retain
hegemony at the expense of its allies will continue to drive a wedge between
them. Eroding cooperation in a number of domains is also inevitable, largely
because of the intense competition among capitalists in the core to retain global
market share at any cost using the state to buttress their interests. War could
bring NATO allies together, but it is hardly a long-term solution and the risks
are even deeper divisions to follow after the war.

Sunday, 29 April 2018

A Forbes article entitled, “On May Day, Communism
Is A Much-Closeted Joke” proclaimed the triumph of neoliberalism and the end
of celebrating workers as follows: “Once its biggest self-celebration, May Day
now signals Mayday for global communism. Just a half century ago, it seemed
irrepressible, now communism is just reprehensible, with the relevance of a
renaissance festival. Ironically, it is the Left who most want to forget...
before the lesson behind communism's demise can be more broadly applied.”https://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2013/04/30/on-may-day-communism-is-a-much-closeted-joke/#5e68b35c5c83

By identifying the workers struggle for social justice with the Soviet
regime, Forbes assumes that the rights of workers have no legitimacy in
the social contract, unless otherwise subsumed by the neoliberal institutional
structure. In a world of poignantly expressed “selfie” narcissistic pathology
as a manifestation of how the hegemonic culture has triumphed over humanity, collectivist
humane values are antithetical to the neoliberal status quo. The dominant
culture indoctrinates the individual toward preoccupation with self and the rejection
of the real community replaced by the virtual one where the self is itself a
commodity and where misanthropic traits are inadvertently cultivated by the
institutional structure that molds identity around material possessions as
conduits to happiness. Despite widespread neglect, abuse and financial
exploitation of the elderly in run-down nursing homes; and despite poorly
educated children are a stark reality, as the rich-poor gap and poverty is
rising amid a growing economy, the dominant culture incessantly conditions the
individual to reject the welfare of humanity, and to focus only on the self and
virtual reality of a "commoditized" world.

How has civilization degenerated to this level, just as its elites proclaim
that everything is done in the name of “progress” for all of humanity? How has
the world come to except systemic exploitation as normal within the context of
a ‘democratic’ society identified with the market economy and with labor as its
enemy? Beyond anti-unionism, a euphemism for pro-corporate-welfare capitalism,
the dominant culture is misanthropic in practice no matter what the varieties
of bourgeois liberals and conservatives proclaim, only to be contradicted by
policies detrimental to working people who are constantly distracted by
everything from nationalism, militarism, religion and all types of identity
pollical issues intended to maintain the existing unjust social order and
misanthropic culture.

Against the background of an open war on labor by capital and the state, a
war that intensified after 1945 – advent of the Cold War - and became more
openly hostile after 1980 – advent of neoliberalism - the significance of May
Day has been diminished to such a degree that even the sixty-six countries
still officially celebrating this day to honor workers, do so superficially,
with vacuous populist rhetoric while public policy points toward a different
direction. Governments pursue anti-labor policies in accordance with
neoliberalism aimed to intensify capital accumulation at any cost to society,
including wars that displace millions of people from their homes, and downward
social mobility with all its consequences from poor health to lack of education
and adequate housing.To buttress
private enterprise, which would otherwise collapse if it were not for government
and its agencies acting as conduits for income transfer from the general
population to the richest segment, the state constantly transfers income from
social programs to corporate welfare, all in the name of economic growth
synonymous with capitalist accumulation.

It is indeed ironic that the US, where May Day has its
origin, government has never celebrated this day, but instead has declared it
‘law and order day’ since Eisenhower. This is indicative of contempt for
workers by a capitalist-controlled state and the resolve to prevent labor from
demanding a voice in public policy as it did in the 19th century
when it confronted a violently hostile employer backed by the state. Today, many
Republican and Democrats openly and unapologetically acknowledge capitalist
monopoly over public policy.Mick
Mulvaney, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, unashamedly
invited 1,300 bank executives to help him convert the agency that he heads into
a pro-banking institution, more so than it is currently, by contributing money
to politicians favoring banking deregulation and curbing consumer protection
safeguards. “We had a hierarchy in my
office in Congress. If you’re a lobbyist
who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us
money, I might talk to you.”

An honest admission of the degree to which neoliberalism has triumphed,
Mulvaney’s speech was indicative of the degree to which capital is now in an
open politically-normalized war against labor and society. This is no different
than it was in the post-Civil War era when the nascent labor movement in
America confronted the combined forces of both employers and the state in the
struggle for living wages, safety, and varieties of employer abuses of workers,
including children and women. An estimated 35,000 workers, mostly Italian and
Irish immigrants, went on strike in Chicago on May 1, 1886 in what became known as the Haymarket Massacre. They
demanded an 8-hour workday, fair wages, work safety, abolition of child labor,
and the end to labor exploitation by management in the workplace. The response
was the police striking workers and government adopting harsh measures against
any worker trying to organize in the aftermath. William J Adelman, founder of
the Illinois Labor History Society and Vice President, correctly stated: "No
single event has influenced the history of labor in Illinois, the United
States, and even the world, more than the Chicago Haymarket Affair. It began
with a rally on May 4, 1886, but the consequences are still being felt today.
Although the rally is included in American history textbooks, very few present
the event accurately or point out its significance."

As Adelman pointed out, American society is more anti-labor than many other
advanced capitalist countries, though anti-labor policies have spread globally
under neoliberalism since the 1980s. While the police are not out killing
workers as they were in the 19th and early 20th century,
the contemporary neoliberal state has adopted policies intended to crush
organized labor and silence any voice of dissent to the corporate welfare
state.As a market-based institutional
order impacting every aspect of society, including personal identity, neoliberal
corporate welfare has replaced social welfare capitalism. The neoliberal goal
is to turn the clock back to the early stages of capitalist development when
labor had no rights and the state’s role was to act as a conduit for private
capital accumulation. Although society’s institutional evolution does not
permit for a return to 19th century social conditions, the trend is
to erase as many of the vestiges of social welfare as possible in order to
accelerate capital accumulation.

Whether neoliberalism operates under the pluralist model where vestiges of
social welfare and diversity remain as part of the legal structure, or under
the populist authoritarian model intended to erase pluralism and social
welfare, the goal is capital accumulation through massive transfer of income
from labor and the middle class to the richest tiny percentage in the world. Employers
had no difficulty convincing the government to crush the labor movement in
Chicago through violent means in the 1880s or to execute a number of labor
leaders in the aftermath, thus sending a strong message to the world about the
absence of workers’ rights, civil rights, human rights and social justice. The
infamous Chicago Haymarket Massacre left a legacy of the class struggle
with reverberations around the world, exposing the myth of bourgeois democracy
as representative of anyone outside the capitalist class. Anti-union and
anti-labor policies were characteristic of the US government from Haymarket
until the Great Depression when Roosevelt cleverly broadened the labor movement
in order to co-opt if as part of the Democratic party, thus deradicalizing
workers and subordinating the class struggle to capital, in return for a social
welfare state.

Post-Vietnam War progressive opposition to the misanthropic neoliberal culture
in most countries has been co-opted by pluralist neoliberal political parties
claiming to represent all classes within the context of the existing social
order. Every identity group, from minorities, women, elderly, alternative
lifestyle, environmental groups, etc. is represented under the larger umbrella
of a pluralist political party. Similarly, the conservative to rightwing
identity groups, religious, nationalist, militarist, xenophobic, racist,
misogynist, etc. are under the umbrella of the populist/authoritarian
neoliberal political camp as in Trump’s Republican Party. The left representing
the working class – lower middle class included – has a very weak voice so
marginalized a much in the historically anti-left America as in most of the
Western World. Instead of joining the progressive leftist camp, the labor
movement is itself co-opted by the neoliberal political parties of the
pluralist or populist variety, thus society operates under a totalitarian
canopy within which the choices are between the neoliberal pluralist or the
populist pluralist parties, with variations in modalities, considering inherent
conflicts among the political and financial elites choosing different camps.

President Macron representing the pluralist neoliberal camp in France is just
as militaristic and anti-labor as Trump representing the populist neoliberal
camp in the US. Labor’s representation in these governments is non-existent.
Operating within the parliamentary system, France has an anti-capitalist
non-revolutionary party, though it has not been put to the test and it has a
very long way to go before it takes power. The myth about social welfare costs is easily disputed when considering that the US spends twice as much for corporate welfare. "The final totals are $59 billion, 3 percent of the total
federal budget, for regular welfare and $92 billion, 5 percent of the total
federal budget, for corporations. So, the government spends roughly 50% more on
corporate welfare than it does on these particular public assistance programs."https://thinkbynumbers.org/government-spending/corporate-welfare/corporate-vs-social-welfare/

In the neoliberal age that dominates life in all its aspects, the
development of genuine socialism seems unattainable and people become
fatalistic or apathetic. However, the contradictions of the neoliberal
establishment, the countless of contradictions in the social order will produce
the foundations of a new social order built on the ashes of the one decaying. The
declarations of the Asia-Europe People’s Forum in the last two decades point
out some of the structural problems of the neoliberal status quo, as
articulated by heads of state. However, these declarations remain mere
rhetoric, as the 11th Asia-Europe Meeting Summit of July 2016 illustrates.

Working for Inclusive, Just, and
Equal Alternatives in Asia and Europe. AEPF11 tackled strategies on major
themes or People’s Visions, representing the hopes of citizens of the two
regions. These are:

ASEM11 touches on some of the problems
without analyzing their root causes, namely, globalist neoliberal policies that
the same heads of state as signatories are pursuing.While agreeing on the interlocking nature of
the crises of capitalism, and acknowledging such crises are the cause of
greater social polarization - poverty, inequality, joblessness, and insecurity –
they are not willing to abandon the very system that gives rise to the crises. While
they readily admit that “We are
increasingly experiencing corporate capture”, whereby multinational and
national corporations structure and determine our lives and livelihoods,”
they are unwilling to do anything about it. No government is doing anything to
encourage genuine grassroots progressive movements, labor and social movements
that would become the foundation for a new social order rooted in social
justice. On the contrary, the goal is to prevent labor mobilization,
progressive social organizations, unless of course they are co-opted and
subordinate to the goals of neoliberalism. That the US does not celebrate May Day to honor workers is a reflection of the dominant culture's contempt for labor. For those countries that officially celebrate May Day while pursuing neoliberal anti-labor policies, the holiday has
been reduced to about the same level of hypocrisy as any national Independence
Day – oppression remains a reality for workers, while equality and social justice are a distant
dream.

"A
gripping, passion-filled, and suspenseful tale of love, betrayal,
political and religious intrigue, this novel entices the reader’s
senses and intellect beyond conventions. Slaves to Gods and Demons
takes the reader through a roller coaster enthralling journey of
personal trials and triumphs of a family emerging vanquished and
destitute after World War II.

Narrated by a young boy, Morfeos, modeled after the Greco-Roman pagan
deity of sleep and dreams, the book reveals the soul of a people trying
to ascertain and assert their identity while rebuilding their lives and
recapturing the glory of a lost civilization.

Seeking liberation from restraints of time, social conventions, and
binding traditions, the deity of dreams provides the conformist and the
free-spirited characters in the novel with venues for redemption that
are mere paths toward illusions. Exploring the complexities of human
relationships shaped by priest and politician alike, the novel rests on
the central theme that life is invariably a series of illusions, some
of which are euphoric, most horrifying, all an integral part of daily
existence.

Striving for purpose amid life’s absurdities after the destruction of
western civilization in two global wars, the characters in Slaves to
Gods and Demons struggle between holding on to the glory and grandeur of
a pagan legacy and the Christian present shaped by contemporary
secular events in Western Civilization."